Wife of Mongolian activist says she was detained

The wife of a long-imprisoned ethnic Mongolian activist in China said on Monday that she has spent nearly two years in detention and house arrest on a fabricated charge to silence her family, and that her husband is suffering from depression.

Xinna said by telephone that her husband, Hada, who was accused of separatism and spying in China’s region of Inner Mongolia and has been detained for 17 years, has become “very depressed” in custody. Many ethnic Mongolians use only one name.

Xinna appealed for the international community to help win Hada’s release.

“He is in a very bad state,” Xinna said by telephone on Monday from the regional capital of Hohhot, adding she has seen her husband about once a month recently.

“I asked him to walk around, but he wouldn’t. The doctor suggested that he should be transferred to a mental health hospital, but they won’t allow that. They don’t even give him toilet paper,” she said.

Xinna, 57, said she and her son, Weilesi, 28, were detained in December 2010 – she on charges of illegally bootlegging CDs and he on drug charges – and that both have been under tight surveillance since her release in April.

Weilesi was released on bail in September last year, and authorities decided not to prosecute him last month, Xinna said. She was given a three-year sentence in April that was commuted to house arrest. Both have denied any wrongdoing, and Xinna said the charges were aimed at silencing them.

While ethnic separatism is not well known in Inner Mongolia, it’s a sensitive issue for China’s government, which fears the spread of the violent unrest that has hit its regions of Tibet and Xinjiang in recent years.

Repeated calls to police and government offices in Hohhot rang unanswered on Monday.

Chinese authorities routinely harass family members of prominent dissidents, subjecting them to monitoring, questioning, house arrest or detention to silence them or to pressure the activists into compliance.

Hada formed a political group in the early 1990s that strived for self-determination of Inner Mongolia, a Chinese region bordering the independent state of Mongolia. The family bookstore in Hohhot became the centre of the movement.

Hada was ordered to spend 15 years in prison, but at the time of his scheduled release in December 2010 he was detained again by authorities with no word on his whereabouts. Xinna and Weilesi were taken into custody shortly before Hada’s scheduled release.

Mother and son now share a rented house in a Hohhot suburb.

“There are several cameras that have been installed around my house,” Xinna said. “If I go out I need to get approval from authorities and I am followed by police.”